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In Windows 3.1, additional options are available, such as /3, which starts Windows in 386 enhanced mode, and /S, which starts Windows in standard mode [2] A startup sound was first added in Windows 3.0 after installing the Multimedia Extensions (MME), [3] but not enabled by default until Windows 3.1.
Bill Brown IV (born 1969) is an American composer [1] [2] of music for video games, films and television. His work appears on Microsoft's Windows XP operating system, as creator of the system sounds, and as music for the tour software.
The result was the six-second start-up music-sound of the Windows 95 operating system, The Microsoft Sound and it was first released as a startup sound in May 1995 on Windows 95 May Test Release build 468. [31]
The MME API or the Windows Multimedia API (also known as WinMM) was the first universal and standardized Windows audio API. Wave sound events played in Windows (up to Windows XP) and MIDI I/O use MME. The devices listed in the Multimedia/Sounds and Audio control panel applet represent the MME API of the sound card driver.
On December 15, 1997, Microsoft released Windows 98 Beta 3. It was the first build to be able to upgrade from Windows 3.1x, and introduced new startup and shutdown sounds. [10] Near its completion, Windows 98 Release Candidate was released on April 3, 1998, [11] which expired on December 31 of the same year
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The post-shutdown screen (LOGOS.SYS) of all versions of English Windows 9x. LOGO.SYS is a core system file used by the Windows 9x family of operating systems to display its boot-up message. It is a system file that is used to display a boot screen as part of the startup process found in Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows Me.